Difference between revisions of "Ethereum node"
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↑ https://geth.ethereum.org/docs/fundamentals/node-architecture
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An Ethereum node is composed of two clients: an [[execution client]] and a [[consensus client]]. <ref>https://geth.ethereum.org/docs/fundamentals/node-architecture</ref> | An Ethereum node is composed of two clients: an [[execution client]] and a [[consensus client]]. <ref>https://geth.ethereum.org/docs/fundamentals/node-architecture</ref> | ||
− | * [[Full node]] | + | * [[Full node]] store all the blockchain’s data and participate in [[block validation]] |
* [[Light node]] | * [[Light node]] | ||
* [[Archive node]] | * [[Archive node]] |
Revision as of 06:41, 11 June 2024
An Ethereum node is composed of two clients: an execution client and a consensus client. [1]
- Full node store all the blockchain’s data and participate in block validation
- Light node
- Archive node
Related
- Ethereum archive node
- DAppNode
- Blockscout
- Blockchain explorer
- Ethereum validator
- Ethereum sync: Ethereum consensus layer sync modes, Ethereum execution layer synchronization nodes
See also
- Ethereum nodes: full node, archive node, light nodes, Node Discovery Protocol v5
- Ethereum clients,
geth
, Prysm, Nimbus,lighthouse
- Ethereum
ETH
, Ethereum 2.0, smart contract, EVM, ERC-20, DAG, Ethereum Classic, Polygon, BAT, Solidity, Gas, Nonce, Chainlink, Vitalik Buterin, Gavin Wood, Ethereum Foundation, EIPs, ERC, Lighthouse ethereum client, Prysm, Ethereum clients, Ethereum Gossip Protocol, sETH, ETH1 address, Ganache, Aave, Harmony, Account abstraction, Ethereum node, gwei, NatSpec, Precompiles, Dencun, Eth-keyfile, Ethereum API, Blobs, Ethereum SRB, Ethereum scaling, Ethereum JWT, Ethstats, abidump
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